| Literature DB >> 33312398 |
Hui-Kang Xu1, Li-Jun Chen1, Si-Ning Zhou1, Yi-Fei Li1, Charlie Xiang2.
Abstract
Mesenchymal stem cells can be replaced by exosomes for the treatment of inflammatory diseases, injury repair, degenerative diseases, and tumors. Exosomes are small vesicles rich in a variety of nucleic acids [including messenger RNA, Long non-coding RNA, microRNA (miRNA), and circular RNA], proteins, and lipids. Exosomes can be secreted by most cells in the human body and are known to play a key role in the communication of information and material transport between cells. Like exosomes, miRNAs were neglected before their role in various activities of organisms was discovered. Several studies have confirmed that miRNAs play a vital role within exosomes. This review focuses on the specific role of miRNAs in MSC-derived exosomes (MSC-exosomes) and the methods commonly used by researchers to study miRNAs in exosomes. Taken together, miRNAs from MSC-exosomes display immense potential and practical value, both in basic medicine and future clinical applications, in treating several diseases. ©The Author(s) 2020. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.Entities:
Keywords: Exosomes; Inflammatory diseases; Injury repair; Mesenchymal stem cells; MicroRNA; Modulation of mesenchymal stem cells
Year: 2020 PMID: 33312398 PMCID: PMC7705472 DOI: 10.4252/wjsc.v12.i11.1276
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Stem Cells ISSN: 1948-0210 Impact factor: 5.326
Exosome isolation methods
| Ultracentrifugation | Exosomes are purified by physical centrifugation according to their size and specific gravity | (1) The most common method; (2) Bulk extractability; and (3) Low cost | (1) The operation is complex and time-consuming; (2) Increased impurities; (3) Loss due to adsorption on the tube wall; and (4) Expensive equipment is needed[ |
| Ultrafiltration | According to the size of exosomes, exosomes are separated by filter membrane | (1) Simple operation; (2) Rapid process; and (3) High yield | (1) Low-purity; and (2) Stress and shear forces can cause exosome damage |
| Size exclusion chromatography | The biofluid dissolves in the mobile phase and passes through the stationary phase, in which the various components of the mixture move at different speeds and are separated[ | (1) High recovery rate; and (2) The structural integrity of exosomes is maintained | (1) Time-consuming; and (2) Low-purity |
| Precipitation[ | By chemical extraction, the exosome liquid is combined with the liquid in the kit, and eventually the exosomes are deposited. | (1) Simple operation; (2) Rapid process; (3) No need for special equipment | Increased impurities |
| Immune affinity capture | Immune isolation is performed by magnetic bead-specific adsorption of exosome surface antigens | (1) Easy operation; (2) Rapid process; (3) High purity; and (4) High yield | (1) Does not apply to large-volume cell supernatant; and (2) High cost |
| Microfluidic technologies (ExoChip) | A microfluidic platform based on nano-acoustic filters, viscoelastic fluid separation, lateral displacement, and immune affinity separates exosomes from biological fluids | (1) Rapid separation; (2) High purity; and (3) Saving the sample | The research is not sufficient and is not widely used at present |
Figure 1Exosomes are small vesicles that are secreted by cells and wrapped in membranes made up of lipid bilayer molecules. Exosomes contain proteins, nucleic acids, and other substances. Their proteins include heat shock proteins, MVB biogenesis proteins, cytoskeleton proteins, apoptosis, ligand, embrane transport proteins and so on. Their nucleic acids include mRNA, miRNA, lncRNA, DNA, and so on. ALIX: ALG-2 interacting protein X; CXCR4: CXC-chemokine receptor 4; GAPDH: Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase; HSP70: Heat shock 70 kDa protein; TSG101: Tumor susceptibility gene 101 protein.
Representative clinical trials of mesenchymal stem cell-derived exosomes
| Allogenic mesenchymal stromal cells | Cerebrovascular disorders | Intravenous injection | Completed | MiRNA-184, miRNA-210, miR-133b, miR-17-92[ |
| Allogenic adipose mesenchymal stem cells | COVID-19 | Aerosol inhalation | PhaseI | Has not been reported |
| Allogenic mesenchymal stromal cells | Multiple organ failure | Intravenous injection | Not yet Recruiting | Has not been reported |
| Human UC-MSCs | Macular holes | Intravitreal injection | PhaseI | Has not been reported |
| Human UC-MSCs | Dry eyes | Eye drops | Phase II | Has not been reported |
| Adipose mesenchymal stem cell | Alzheimer’s disease | Nasal drip | Phase II | MiR-146a-5p[ |
| Human UC-MSCs | Diabetes mellitus type 1 | Intravenous infusion | Phase III | MiR-1908, miR-203a[ |
| MSCs | COVID-19 | Inhalation | Phase II | Has not been reported |
| Human UC-MSCs | Chronic ulcer | Applying and closed by transparent dressing | Completed | Has not been reported |
UC-MSCs: Umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells; MSCs: Mesenchymal stem cells; COVID-19: Corona virus disease 2019.
Figure 2Exosomes were first isolated from the cultured supernatant of stem cells and injected intravenously into the model. The exosomes then reach the damaged site, are absorbed by the cells, and enter the cell: (1) Exosome-derived microRNA binds to enhancers in the nucleus to promote gene expression; (2) miRNA in exosomes bind to the 3’-UTR of the mRNA for mRNA degradation; and (3) exosomes inhibit mRNA translation. The second and third ways have been studied, and the first way is based on the assumption of existing studies. RISC: RNA-induced silencing complex.
Representative articles on inflammatory regulation
| Placenta-derived mesenchymal stromal cells | Duchenne muscular dystrophy | MiR-29c | TGF-β | Reporter gene assays[ |
| Induced pluripotent stem cells | Group 2 innate lymphoid cell-dominant allergic airway | MiR-146a-5p | T helper 2 (Th2) cytokines | Anion-exchange chromatography; RNA sequencing[ |
| Mouse BM-MSCs | Peripheral neuropathy in diabetes | MiR-17, miR-23a, and miR-125b | TLR4/NF-κB signaling pathway. | MiRNA array; ultracentrifugation[ |
| MSCs | Myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury | MiR-182 | TLR4 pathway | Differential centrifugation; miRNA sequencing[ |
| Human UC-MSCs | Burn-induced excessive inflammation | MiR-181c | TLR4 pathway | PureExo Column; miRNA array analysis[ |
| LPS-preconditioned MSCs | Wound healing | Let-7b | TLR4 pathway | Gradient centrifugation; miRNA microarray[ |
| Human UC-MSCs | Hyperglycemia-induced retinal inflammation | MiR-126 | HMGB1 signaling pathway | Ultracentrifugation[ |
BM-MSCs: Bone marrow MSCs; UC-MSCs: Umbilical cord mesenchymal stem cells; MSCs: Mesenchymal stem cells; TGF-β: Transforming growth factor-β; TLR4: Toll-like receptor 4; HMGB1: High-mobility group box-1.
Representative studies in which MSC-derived exosomes affect tumors through miRNAs
| BM-MSCs | Osteosarcoma | MiR-208a | Downregulation of PDCD4 and activation of the ERK1/2 pathway | Promoting tumor progression[ |
| BM-MSCs | Multiple myeloma | MiR-146a | The Notch pathway | Promoting tumor progression[ |
| BM-MSCs | Colon cancer | MiR-142-3p | Downregulation of Numb | Promoting tumor progression |
| BM-MSCs | Breast cancer | MiR-23b | Decreased MARCKS expression | Inhibiting tumor progression[ |
| MiR-122-transfected AMSCs | HCC | MiR-122 | without research | Inhibiting tumor progression[ |
| BM-MSCs | Prostate cancer | MiR-143 | TFF3 | Inhibiting tumor progression[ |
| MSCs | Breast cancer | MiR-100 | VEGF | Inhibiting tumor progression[ |
BM-MSCs: Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells; AMSCs: Adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells; MSCs: Mesenchymal stem cells; HCC: Hepatocellular carcinoma; TFF3: Trefoil factor 3; VEGF: Vascular endothelial growth factor.